johnwilliams
Registered User
- Messages
- 244
I agree on the question about kids and family. Don't make any small talk.Take a look at the guidelines on the 9 grounds for discrimination here, steer clear of questions that might be perceived to touch on any of these. As a rule, stick to questions that have a direct relevance to the job at hand, don't try to break the ice by talking about where they came from, kids, etc.. If the job is physical in nature you are allowed ascertain whether they are capable of performing the duties, but must be very careful not to stray beyond the boundaries of the role.
I would be more concerned by the fact that the company has provided him with no guidance/training on the task. It is an area where he, and the company, can leave themselves open to a lot of grief.
Best advice these days is not to write notes for the kept file, use some sort of numerical grading system on the kept file, all other stuff shredded before the meeting ends after the interviewee leaves the room.Even the notes taken during an interview can be requested by a freedom of information request. So you have to be careful of what you write as well as what you say.
... so no pornographic doodles in the margins.Even the notes taken during an interview can be requested by a freedom of information request. So you have to be careful of what you write as well as what you say.
..... Don't make any small talk.
If you ask about family, kids, where they live, anything about whether they are in a relationship etc you are leaving yourself open to a discrimination claim.By all means use common sense and don't go asking silly questions ... but equally, you want to put both yourself and the interview candidate at ease, so a little small talk helps at the beginning and end of the interview, imho. Just keep it simple - sport is an old reliable, or social / community events which may be taking place.
By all means use common sense and don't go asking silly questions ... but equally, you want to put both yourself and the interview candidate at ease, so a little small talk helps at the beginning and end of the interview, imho. Just keep it simple - sport is an old reliable, or social / community events which may be taking place.
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I've interviewed in Northern Ireland and you can't ask about sports or events up there because it could be deemed to be trying to find out a person's religion and political beliefs.
my advice would be to be polite and friendly, stick to the old "tell me about" and "give me an example of when" type questions. Also if you are interviewing for a leadership role, one question I would always ask is "if you delegate a task who has responsibility for that task". Amazing how many people get that wrong.
I'm sure there are other sports one could talk about, besides the old GAA
... F1, Tennis, Cycling etc. etc. .....
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